Boys State & Girls State

To Participate in Boys State & Girls State Sponsored by American Legion Chris Kyle Post & Auxiliary Unit 388.

Group of young men at conference event.

Boys State History

American Legion Boys State is among the most respected and selective educational programs of government instruction for U.S. high school students. A participatory program in which students become part of the operation of local, county, and state government, Boys State was founded in 1935 to counter the socialism-inspired Young Pioneer Camps. The program was the idea of two Illinois Legionnaires, Hayes Kennedy and Harold Card, who organized the first Boys State at the Illinois State Fairgrounds in Springfield.

At Boys State, participants learn the rights, privileges, and responsibilities of franchised citizens. The training is objective and centers on the structure of city, county, and state governments. Operated by students elected to various offices, Boys State activities include legislative sessions, court proceedings, law-enforcement presentations, assemblies, bands, choruses, and recreational programs.

Legion posts select high school juniors to attend the program. In most cases, individual expenses are paid by a sponsoring post, a local business, or another community-based organization.

Boys State programs currently exist in all Legion departments in the United States except Hawaii. As separate corporations, Boys State programs vary in content and method of procedure, but each adheres to the same basic concept: teaching government from the township to the state level.

Girls State History

The American Legion Family Chris Kyle #388 and American Legion Auxiliary began an effort over five decades ago to devise a means to:

educate our youth in the duties, privileges, and responsibilities of American citizenship

Give future citizens, realistically, an opportunity to learn the problems of government by performing the same duties as real office holders in the everyday world.

Inform them of the rights and privileges of American citizenship.

Instill a deep sense of the personal responsibilities and obligations that this citizenship entails.

The Girls State program in Texas has been one of constant improvement and growth. The number of participants has grown from 94 to over 500. The progress of Girls State in Texas could not have been accomplished if it had not been for the pioneers of Bluebonnet Girls State; the full cooperation and encouragement of the department presidents of the American Legion Auxiliary; former directors, members, and chairmen of the Girls State Committee; the press, radio, and television; school and state officials; interested individuals; most of all, the local units that sponsor girls; and last but not least, the citizens.

One of Girls State’s most influential pioneers was Frances Goff, who began working with Girls State in 1947. She used her considerable experience in state government to shape the program as director from 1952 until 1994.

During past sessions of Girls State, citizens have been privileged to hear many outstanding speakers, including then Governor George W. Bush, former Presidents George Bush and Lyndon Baines Johnson, First Lady Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, and Miss Barbara Jordan. Former Girls State citizens Gov. Ann W. Richards, Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, Judge Bea Ann Smith, and others have also returned to the program as guest speakers.

Group of girls at Texas Girls State event.